Why this injury scares pediatric surgeons
Hip dislocation in children is rare. About 1 in 100,000 kids get one each year. Combine it with a broken thigh bone on the same side and the injury becomes very uncommon.
The danger is not just the dislocation. It's what happens to the bone afterward.
The top of the thigh bone (called the femoral head) gets its blood from small arteries. If those arteries get stretched or cut, the bone can die. This is called avascular necrosis, or AVN. In kids, AVN can ruin a hip for life.
The clock is ticking
Doctors know that every hour matters. After 12 hours of delay, the risk of AVN can climb more than fivefold.
But speed is not enough. The path surgeons choose also matters.
Old way versus new way
Traditionally, surgeons fix a posterior (rear) hip dislocation by going in through the back. It makes sense. You approach the problem from the direction it went.
But here's the twist. The main artery feeding the child's femoral head runs along the back too. Cutting through that area in a growing child can damage the very blood supply you're trying to protect.
So these surgeons flipped the script. They went in through the front instead, using what's called the Smith-Petersen approach.
Think of the hip like a ball sitting in a socket. Behind the ball run the pipes that deliver blood. Behind the socket runs the path most surgeons use.
The anterior (front) approach sidesteps those pipes. It's like entering a house through the front door when the back door is tangled in power lines.
The team also had to fix the broken thigh bone. Without a solid lever (the femur), you cannot easily push the hip back in place. They used a metal plate along the side of the thigh to stabilize it.
This is a single case report. One child. One injury. One surgical decision.
The boy had a posterior hip dislocation on the right side. His right thigh bone was displaced and broken mid-shaft. Surgeons used the anterior approach to reduce the hip and added a lateral plate to fix the femur.
Then they watched him for 18 months.
What they found at follow-up
At a year and a half out, the boy walked normally. He carried full weight on the leg. His hip moved through its complete range of motion.
The broken thigh bone had healed solid. The hip joint lined up correctly on imaging. No signs of avascular necrosis appeared.
His legs were the same length. That matters in a growing child. A shorter leg can twist posture and cause back pain later.
This is where it gets interesting
Most surgical reports of this injury use the posterior approach because that's tradition. This case suggests tradition may not be best for children.
The anterior approach is harder in some ways. It requires careful knowledge of pediatric anatomy. But the payoff, in this boy's case, was a hip that stayed alive.
This report alone does not change practice. But it adds to a growing conversation among pediatric orthopedic surgeons. Some experts argue that protecting the medial circumflex femoral artery (the main blood pipe to the femoral head) should guide every decision in these rare cases.
The authors suggest that when posterior tissues are already injured from the dislocation, cutting through them surgically may compound the damage.
What this means for parents
If your child ever suffers a major leg injury, know that hip dislocations can hide inside other fractures. ER doctors usually catch them, but ask about the hip specifically.
Speed matters. So does the experience of the surgeon. Pediatric trauma centers see these cases more often and may have more tools to choose from.
This is not a standard approach yet, and parents should not demand it. Each injury is different, and the right call depends on how the bones are broken and how much time has passed.
Honest limits
One child is not proof. This is what doctors call a hypothesis-generating case. It shows something may work, not that it always does.
The surgeons were skilled and the boy was otherwise healthy. Other children with different injuries or delays may not have the same outcome.
Larger case series from multiple hospitals would help. A registry tracking these rare combined injuries could reveal which approach gives the best long-term results.
For now, surgeons will keep weighing tradition against anatomy, one child at a time.